My co-worker asked if I've started my Christmas shopping (she knows it's just me and mum) and then said, "Oh yes, I suppose you have not many to buy for". Not nice?
I would disagree with the majority and say that your colleague sounded rather dismissive - possibly even patronising but the written word hides the way in which something is said. If you have a well-developed feeling of sensitivity that can make it difficult for you to accept some remarks. At least she is a colleague rather than a friend, Treacle. I hope a...
Experience shows that those of us with a lot of people to buy for, do envy those who have less gifts to find - I don't think your colleague meant anything nasty in her comment.
I would disagree with the majority and say that your colleague sounded rather dismissive - possibly even patronising but the written word hides the way in which something is said. If you have a well-developed feeling of sensitivity that can make it difficult for you to accept some remarks. At least she is a colleague rather than a friend, Treacle. I hope a friend would have been more sensitive to you by asking what you had bought for your mother for example.
//First world problem. If that's all you've got to worry about you are very lucky.//
Not lucky. Anybody in that position is simply taking advantage of the hard work and endeavour put in by our ancestors to leave the place nicer when they'd finished than it was when they started. It's what people do.
The problem is that, because of factors which are largely outside of their control (and some that are), people around in the UK at present are probably unlikely to be able to do that for their descendants.
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